I need help
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I need help
Besides being simple and as straight forward as an old tractor, there is something else about Evo's. The people that ride them tend to be more helpful, less uptight, less weekend pirate SOA types playing dress up, more ordinary fun loving folks that will give you the shirt off their back without being asked. Countless times on this very forum I have seen people give someone a part for free to help a guy out.
No, I am not bashing twin cammers. It is just a broad observation. Evo riders also tend to laugh at themselves and not take themselves too seriously.
With Evo's, the reliability and quality is there without being complicated. And everything is rebuildable.
When I go somewhere, most of the bikes are newer twin cammers, yet my bike garners a lot of attention. Not from a flashy paint job or goofy enormous front wheel or anything. It is just the fact that here is this older bike in great shape that sounds ten times better than the newer bikes while utilizing low tech stuff like a carburetor.
Again, not taking away from the TC's, but I guess it also reminds people of simpler better times, which is what drew most of us to HD in the first place.
No, I am not bashing twin cammers. It is just a broad observation. Evo riders also tend to laugh at themselves and not take themselves too seriously.
With Evo's, the reliability and quality is there without being complicated. And everything is rebuildable.
When I go somewhere, most of the bikes are newer twin cammers, yet my bike garners a lot of attention. Not from a flashy paint job or goofy enormous front wheel or anything. It is just the fact that here is this older bike in great shape that sounds ten times better than the newer bikes while utilizing low tech stuff like a carburetor.
Again, not taking away from the TC's, but I guess it also reminds people of simpler better times, which is what drew most of us to HD in the first place.
#17
I can't speak to the TC as I have never owned or even ridden one. Don't want to. To me the essence of a Harley is lost when you start adding complex electronics and such. The whole mystique of HD is the owners in the past were always motorcycle people. They pretty much all worked on their own bikes and that is why you see (or used to see) almost every HD being a little removed from stock. The rugged simplicity of them is what a HD was. Now, I like to work on complex German cars, so the complexity of the TC is not scary in the least to me.....but for some reason whatever it is that keeps me interested in the Harleys (I have owned sport biked on and off too over the years) I know ends with the TC. They just seem not much different than the metric cruisers IMHO. I have noticed the TC bikes and the people who own them....have pretty much gone in a different direction than what the brand and their riders used to be. But alas, you want to know mechanically if the evo is good. They are simple and fairly reliable..but you have to not mind knowing and doing a little work yourself. If your toolbox is your checkbook, you may not want an evo...or even a HD. But if your indy is a HD guy and I doubt he is by the frown on evo's he will likely have good things to say about evos. Good bikes.
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#19
The mechanicals is not really a problem for me, unless it's a massive job like taking the engine out as I struggle a bit with the old arthritis, which is why more often than not I have someone do the work for me. I am trained to a basic level and qualified to do the yearly road worthiness check here in the UK.
I thought I'd found a really good indy guy and he serviced my RK for me a few days ago. He sounded like he knew what he was talking about, and to add to that he is a nice person. But he checked the trans oil with the bike on the side stand, so when I got it back I had to take 300ml out of it. He swore that a 2005 RK is check on the stand but I said no, RTFM.
Anyhow, it was him I was asking about the EVO softy. There are 2 at a dealers about 2 hours ride away, and I set off this morning but it was raining so hard I couldn't see the road, so have postponed it until the weather here calms down a bit.
The last few times I've changed a bike I've had a crossover between buying and selling, just so I don't make a huge mistake, and then sold on after I'm sure I'm happy, but now it's the wrong time of year to be selling, so Maybe I'll get a good cash deal on one of the ones I have my eye on and then sell one of the TCs next year in the spring.
This is all subject to a test ride of course, I might not even like an Evo, but I am secretly praying that I do.
Oh and just to add to that my G/F said this morning it was about time I bought a real Harley, because the new one (Deluxe) sounds like every other bike on the road, not as good even as the blue one (RK).
I thought I'd found a really good indy guy and he serviced my RK for me a few days ago. He sounded like he knew what he was talking about, and to add to that he is a nice person. But he checked the trans oil with the bike on the side stand, so when I got it back I had to take 300ml out of it. He swore that a 2005 RK is check on the stand but I said no, RTFM.
Anyhow, it was him I was asking about the EVO softy. There are 2 at a dealers about 2 hours ride away, and I set off this morning but it was raining so hard I couldn't see the road, so have postponed it until the weather here calms down a bit.
The last few times I've changed a bike I've had a crossover between buying and selling, just so I don't make a huge mistake, and then sold on after I'm sure I'm happy, but now it's the wrong time of year to be selling, so Maybe I'll get a good cash deal on one of the ones I have my eye on and then sell one of the TCs next year in the spring.
This is all subject to a test ride of course, I might not even like an Evo, but I am secretly praying that I do.
Oh and just to add to that my G/F said this morning it was about time I bought a real Harley, because the new one (Deluxe) sounds like every other bike on the road, not as good even as the blue one (RK).
#20